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期刊名称:SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
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Social PsychologyPublished as Zeitschrift für Sozialpsychologie (ISSN 0044-3514) until volume 38, 2007
ISSN 1864-9335
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About the journal
Social Psychology is a publication dedicated to international research in social psychology as well as a forum for scientific discussion and debate. Social Psychology is published in four issues per annual volume, the first issue appeared in January 2008.
Aims and Scope
The journal welcomes empirical and theoretical contributions to basic research in social psychology, to methodology and philosophy of science related to social psychology, as well as contributions covering research in any of the applied fields of social psychology, such as economics, marketing, politics, law, sports, the environment, the community, or health. Since many topics in social psychology are closely related to issues in other branches of psychology or, more generally, in the social sciences and humanities, the journal is open to contributions of an interdisciplinary nature.
There are two categories of submission: Full-length articles (with a maximum length of 6,000 words) and brief research reports (with a maximum length of 2,500 words).
Experience and Innovation
The journal was published until volume 38 (2007) as the Zeitschrift für Sozialpsychologie (ISSN 0044-3514). Drawing on over 30 years of experience and tradition in publishing high-quality, innovative science as the Zeitschrift für Sozialpsychologie, Social Psychology has an internationally renowned team of editors and consulting editors from all areas of basic and applied social psychology, thus ensuring that the highest international standards are maintained.
Rapid Turnaround
Social Psychology offers a rapid and transparent peer-review process and a short time-lag between acceptance of papers and publication. The time between manuscript submission and editorial decision is usually less than eight weeks.
Instructions to Authors
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Social Psychology
Social Influence on Memory
Guest Editors: Gerald Echterhoff (University of Bielefeld) & William Hirst (New School for Social Research, New York, NY, USA)
Memories are commonly viewed as temporary constructions that are potentially unreliable and susceptible to various biases. An important source of biases is contact and exchange with other people. Until recently, however, memory research has paid little attention to such social influences on memory (see Roediger & McDermott, 2000). Even in social psychology, memory has played the second fiddle in social influence research, with investigators typically focusing on attitude, judgment, and behavior as the object of influence (see Bless, Strack & Walther, 2001). The growing interest in the interface of memory and social psychology has led to a number of studies dealing with phenomena like memory conformity (Gabbert, Memon, & Allan, 2003), social contagion (Meade & Roediger, 2002), or socially shared memory (Cuc, Koppel, & Hirst, 2007). This research draws on classic social-psychological approaches by examining how individuals are influenced by information emanating from other social agents. In another active area, researchers study how the communication of experiences to an audience affects the speakers?own memory for the experience (Echterhoff, Higgins & Groll, 2005; Marsh, 2007). This communicative influence is relatively subtle because the biasing information does not originate from another social agent, but is self-produced by the person who is ultimately influenced. The aims of the special issue are to present current research that makes further progress along these lines, to promote crosstalk between memory researchers and social psychologists, and to advance an integrated understanding of social influences on memory. We invite the submission of empirical and theoretical contributions from the perspective of basic and/or applied research. Contributions should preferably shed new light on the social antecedents, the social mechanisms or the social consequences of memory biases. Relevant areas include memory conformity, social contagion, socially shared forgetting, communication effects, collaborative remembering, transactive memory, memory biases in groups, socially situated memory and learning, influence of social norms and schemata, and collective memory.
Manuscripts should be prepared according to Social Psychology’s guidelines for authors (see Advice for authors). Submissions should be addressed to Gerald Echterhoff:

Deadline for submissions is July 15, 2008
References
Bless, H., Strack, F., & Walther, E. (2001). Memory as a target of social influence? Memory distortions as a function of social influence and metacognitive knowledge. In J. P. Forgas & K. D. Williams (Eds.), Social influence: Direct and indirect processes (pp. 167-183). Philadelphia: Psychology Press.
Cuc, A., Koppel, J. & Hirst, W. (2007). Silence is not golden: A case for socially shared retrieval-induced forgetting. Psychological Science, 18, 727-733.
Echterhoff, G., Higgins, E. T. & Groll, S. (2005). Audience-tuning effects on memory: The role of shared reality. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 89, 257-276.
Gabbert, F., Memon, A., & Allan, K. (2003). Memory conformity: Can eyewitnesses influence each other’s memories for an event? Applied Cognitive Psychology, 17, 533-543.
Marsh, E. J. (2007). Retelling is not the same as recalling: Implications for memory. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 16, 16-20.
Meade, M. L., & Roediger, H. L., III. (2002). Explorations in the social contagion of memory.Memory & Cognition, 30, 995-1009.
Roediger, H. L., & McDermott, K. B. (2000). Distortions of memory. In E. Tulving & F. I. M. Craik (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of memory (pp. 149-162). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Call for Papers for Social Psychology
Social Psychology is a new international peer-reviewed journal dedicated to research in all areas of social psychology, as well as a forum for scientific discussion and debate.
Social Psychology is published in four issues per annual volume, the first issue appeared in January 2008.
Social Psychologyhas an international editorial board of leading researchers in all areas of basic and applied social psychology, thus ensuring that the highest international standards are maintained. It offers a rapid and transparent peer-review process and a short time-lag between acceptance of papers and publication. Authors will usually receive feedback within eight weeks of submission.
Social Psychology invites contributions that advance the understanding of social psychological phenomena. In addition, the journal provides a forum for methodological developments.
Online full-text access to the content of Social Psychology is available via the publisher's online information service PsyCONTENT (http://www.psycontent.com). More detailed information about Social Psychology as well as instructions for authors are provided on the journal homepage: www.hogrefe.com/journals/sp
Editors
Editor-in-Chief Professor Gerd Bohner University of Bielefeld Department of Psychology PO Box 100131 D-33501 Bielefeld Germany Tel. +49 521 106-4437 Fax +49 521 106-6422

Associate Editors Guido Gendolla, University of Geneva, Switzerland Guido Hertel, University of Würzburg, Germany Jolanda Jetten, University of Queensland, Australia Sabine Sczesny, University of Bern, Switzerland R. Scott Tindale, Loyola University, Chicago, IL, USA
Manuscript submission Manuscripts should be submitted as Word or RTF documents via e-mail attachment to the editorial office:
Editorial office Lily-Maria Silny, MA University of Bielefeld Department of Psychology PO Box 100131 D-33501 Bielefeld Germany Tel. +49 521 106-4438 / -4443 Fax +49 521 106-6422
Editorial Board
Editors
Editor-in-Chief
Prof. Dr. Gerd Bohner University of Bielefeld Department of Psychology PO Box 100131 D-33501 Bielefeld Germany Tel. +49 521 106-4437 Fax +49 521 106-6422
Associate Editors
Guido Gendolla, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Guido Hertel, University of Münster, Germany
Jolanda Jetten, University of Queensland, Australia
Sabine Sczesny, University of Bern, Switzerland
R. Scott Tindale, Loyola University, Chicago, IL, USA
Consulting Editors
Andrea Abele-Brehm, Friedrich Alexander University, Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany Dorothee Alfermann, University of Leipzig, Germany Bernad Batinic, Johannes Kepler University, Linz, Austria Herbert Bless, University of Mannheim, Germany Jack Brehm, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA Rupert J. Brown, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK Roland Deutsch, University of Würzburg, Germany Amanda Diekman, Miami University, Oxford, OH, USA Alice H. Eagly, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA Birte Englich, University of Cologne, Germany Hans-Peter Erb, Technical University of Chemnitz, Germany Jens Förster, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Bertram Gawronski, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada Roberto González, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile Ina Grau, University of Bonn, Germany Bettina Hannover, Free University of Berlin, Germany Kurt Hugenberg, Miami University, Oxford, OH, USA Aarti Iyer, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia Eva Jonas, University of Salzburg, Austria Norbert Kerr, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA Barbara Krah? University of Potsdam, Germany Franciska Krings, University of Lausanne, Switzerland Thorsten Meiser, Philipps University, Marburg, Germany Thomas Morton, University of Exeter, UK Gabriel Mugny, University of Geneva, Switzerland) Thomas Mussweiler, University of Cologne, Germany Roland Neumann, University of Dortmund, Germany Paula Niedenthal, Blaise Pascal University, Clermont-Ferrand, France Henning Plessner, Ruprecht Karls University, Heidelberg, Germany Marc-Andr?Reinhard, University of Mannheim, Germany Michelle Ryan, University of Exeter, UK Jürgen Schultz-Gambard, Ludwigs Maximilian University, Munich, Germany Stefan Schulz-Hardt, Georg August University, Göttingen, Germany Frank Siebler, University of Bielefeld, Germany Monika Sieverding, Ruprecht Karls University, Heidelberg, Germany Paul Silvia, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, NC, USA Siegfried Sporer, University of Gießen, Germany Dagmar Stahlberg, University of Mannheim, Germany Diederik A. Stapel, University of Tilburg, The Netherlands Fritz Strack, University of Würzburg, Germany Rolf van Dick, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt/Main, Germany; Aston University, Birmingham, UK Marloes L. van Engen, University of Tilburg, The Netherlands G. Tendayi Viki, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK Ulrich Wagner, Philipps University, Marburg, Germany Eva Walther, University of Trier, Germany Michaela Wänke, University of Basel, Switzerland Michael Wohl, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, Canada Bogdan Wojciszke, Warsaw School of Social Psychology, Poland Rex A. Wright, University of Alabama, Birmingham, AL, USA Vincent Yzerbyt, University of Leuven, Belgium Andreas Zick, University of Bielefeld, Germany
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